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Dive into the research topics where Anja Matanovic is active.

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Featured researches published by Anja Matanovic.


Nature Genetics | 2013

High-density genotyping study identifies four new susceptibility loci for atopic dermatitis.

David Ellinghaus; Hansjörg Baurecht; Elke Rodriguez; Anja Matanovic; Ingo Marenholz; Norbert Hubner; Heidi Schaarschmidt; Natalija Novak; Sven Michel; Laura Maintz; Thomas Werfel; Ulf Meyer-Hoffert; Melanie Hotze; Holger Prokisch; Katharina Heim; Christian Herder; Tomomitsu Hirota; Mayumi Tamari; Michiaki Kubo; Atsushi Takahashi; Yusuke Nakamura; Lam C. Tsoi; Philip E. Stuart; James T. Elder; Liangdan Sun; Xianbo Zuo; Sen Yang; Xuejun Zhang; Per Hoffmann; Markus M. Nöthen

Atopic dermatitis is a common inflammatory skin disease with a strong heritable component. Pathogenetic models consider keratinocyte differentiation defects and immune alterations as scaffolds, and recent data indicate a role for autoreactivity in at least a subgroup of patients. FLG (encoding filaggrin) has been identified as a major locus causing skin barrier deficiency. To better define risk variants and identify additional susceptibility loci, we densely genotyped 2,425 German individuals with atopic dermatitis (cases) and 5,449 controls using the Immunochip array followed by replication in 7,196 cases and 15,480 controls from Germany, Ireland, Japan and China. We identified four new susceptibility loci for atopic dermatitis and replicated previous associations. This brings the number of atopic dermatitis risk loci reported in individuals of European ancestry to 11. We estimate that these susceptibility loci together account for 14.4% of the heritability for atopic dermatitis.


The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology | 2013

A functional IL-6 receptor (IL6R) variant is a risk factor for persistent atopic dermatitis

Heidi Schaarschmidt; Liming Liang; William Cookson; Anja Bauerfeind; Min Ae Lee-Kirsch; Katja Nemat; John Henderson; Lavinia Paternoster; John I. Harper; Elisabeth Mangold; Markus M. Nöthen; Franz Rüschendorf; Tamara Kerscher; Ingo Marenholz; Anja Matanovic; Susanne Lau; Thomas Keil; Carl Peter Bauer; Michael Kurek; Andrzej Ciechanowicz; Milan Macek; Andre Franke; Michael Kabesch; Norbert Hubner; Gonçalo R. Abecasis; Stephan Weidinger; Miriam F. Moffatt; Young-Ae Lee

BACKGROUND Atopic dermatitis (AD) is a common inflammatory skin disease. Previous studies have revealed shared genetic determinants among different inflammatory disorders, suggesting that markers associated with immune-related traits might also play a role in AD. OBJECTIVE We sought to identify novel genetic risk factors for AD. METHODS We examined the results of all genome-wide association studies from a public repository and selected 318 genetic markers that were significantly associated with any inflammatory trait. These markers were considered candidates and tested for association with AD in a 3-step approach including 7 study populations with 7130 patients with AD and 9253 control subjects. RESULTS A functional amino acid change in the IL-6 receptor (IL-6R Asp358Ala; rs2228145) was significantly associated with AD (odds ratio [OR], 1.15; P = 5 × 10(-9)). Interestingly, investigation of 2 independent population-based birth cohorts showed that IL-6R 358Ala specifically predisposes to the persistent form of AD (ORpersistent AD = 1.22, P = .0008; ORtransient AD = 1.04, P = .54). This variant determines the balance between the classical membrane-bound versus soluble IL-6R signaling pathways. Carriers of 358Ala had increased serum levels of soluble IL-6R (P = 4 × 10(-14)), with homozygote carriers showing a 2-fold increase. Moreover, we demonstrate that soluble IL-6R levels were higher in patients with AD than in control subjects (46.0 vs 37.8 ng/mL, P = .001). Additional AD risk variants were identified in RAD50, RUNX3, and ERBB3. CONCLUSION Our study supports the importance of genetic variants influencing inflammation in the etiology of AD. Moreover, we identified a functional genetic variant in IL6R influencing disease prognosis and specifically predisposing to persistent AD.


PLOS Genetics | 2015

Maternal filaggrin mutations increase the risk of atopic dermatitis in children: an effect independent of mutation inheritance

Anja Matanovic; Ingo Marenholz; Anja Bauerfeind; Klaus Rohde; Katja Nemat; Min-Ae Lee-Kirsch; Magnus Nordenskjöld; Mårten C. G. Winge; Thomas Keil; Renate Krüger; Susanne Lau; Kirsten Beyer; Birgit Kalb; Bodo Niggemann; Norbert Hubner; Heather J. Cordell; Maria Bradley; Young-Ae Lee

Epidemiological studies suggest that allergy risk is preferentially transmitted through mothers. This can be due to genomic imprinting, where the phenotype effect of an allele depends on its parental origin, or due to maternal effects reflecting the maternal genomes influence on the child during prenatal development. Loss-of-function mutations in the filaggrin gene (FLG) cause skin barrier deficiency and strongly predispose to atopic dermatitis (AD). We investigated the 4 most prevalent European FLG mutations (c.2282del4, p.R501X, p.R2447X, and p.S3247X) in two samples including 759 and 450 AD families. We used the multinomial and maximum-likelihood approach implemented in the PREMIM/EMIM tool to model parent-of-origin effects. Beyond the known role of FLG inheritance in AD (R1meta-analysis = 2.4, P = 1.0 x 10−36), we observed a strong maternal FLG genotype effect that was consistent in both independent family sets and for all 4 mutations analysed. Overall, children of FLG-carrier mothers had a 1.5-fold increased AD risk (S1 = 1.50, Pmeta-analysis = 8.4 x 10−8). Our data point to two independent and additive effects of FLG mutations: i) carrying a mutation and ii) having a mutation carrier mother. The maternal genotype effect was independent of mutation inheritance and can be seen as a non-genetic transmission of a genetic effect. The FLG maternal effect was observed only when mothers had allergic sensitization (elevated allergen-specific IgE antibody plasma levels), suggesting that FLG mutation-induced systemic immune responses in the mother may influence AD risk in the child. Notably, the maternal effect reported here was stronger than most common genetic risk factors for AD recently identified through genome-wide association studies (GWAS). Our study highlights the power of family-based studies in the identification of new etiological mechanisms and reveals, for the first time, a direct influence of the maternal genotype on the offspring’s susceptibility to a common human disease.


Journal of Investigative Dermatology | 2018

SMARCAD1 haploinsufficiency underlies Huriez syndrome and associated skin cancer susceptibility

Claudia Günther; Min Ae Lee-Kirsch; Jamina Eckhard; Anja Matanovic; Tamara Kerscher; Franz Rüschendorf; Benjamin Klein; Nicole Berndt; Nick Zimmermann; Christina Flachmeier; Theresa Thuß; Nadja Lucas; Ingo Marenholz; Norbert Hubner; Heiko Traupe; E. Delaporte; Young-Ae Lee

Huriez syndrome is a rare dominant genodermatosis characterized by congenital palmoplantar keratosis, scleroatrophic changes of the hands and feet, and an increased risk for cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma (CSCC) in approximately 15% of affected individuals (Figure 1a, Supplementary Table S1 online). CSCC in Huriez syndrome is characterized by early onset, localization on scleroatrophic skin, and aggressive metastasis formation (Delaporte et al., 1995; Hamm et al., 1996) suggesting that the local disease-specific skin changes promote malignant transformation.


Nature Communications | 2015

Meta-analysis identifies seven susceptibility loci involved in the atopic march

Ingo Marenholz; Franz Rüschendorf; Anja Bauerfeind; David P. Strachan; Ben D. Spycher; Hansjörg Baurecht; Patricia Margaritte-Jeannin; Annika Sääf; Marjan Kerkhof; Markus Ege; Svetlana Baltic; Melanie C. Matheson; Jin Li; Sven Michel; Wei Q. Ang; Wendy L. McArdle; Andreas Arnold; Georg Homuth; Florence Demenais; Emmanuelle Bouzigon; Cilla Söderhäll; Göran Pershagen; Johan C. de Jongste; Dirkje S. Postma; Charlotte Braun-Fahrländer; Elisabeth Horak; Ludmila M. Ogorodova; Valery P. Puzyrev; Elena Yu. Bragina; Thomas J. Hudson


/data/revues/00916749/v132i2/S0091674913003229/ | 2013

Compléments : A functional IL-6 receptor ( IL6R ) variant is a risk factor for persistent atopic dermatitis

Heidi Schaarschmidt; Liming Liang; William Cookson; Anja Bauerfeind; Min-Ae Lee-Kirsch; Katja Nemat; John Henderson; Lavinia Paternoster; John I. Harper; Elisabeth Mangold; Markus M. Nöthen; Franz Rüschendorf; Tamara Kerscher; Ingo Marenholz; Anja Matanovic; Susanne Lau; Thomas Keil; Carl-Peter Bauer; Michael Kurek; Andrzej Ciechanowicz; Milan Macek; Andre Franke; Michael Kabesch; Norbert Hubner; Gonçalo R. Abecasis; Stephan Weidinger; Miriam Moffatt; Young-Ae Lee


/data/revues/00916749/v132i2/S0091674913003229/ | 2013

Iconographies supplémentaires de l'article : A functional IL-6 receptor ( IL6R ) variant is a risk factor for persistent atopic dermatitis

Heidi Schaarschmidt; Liming Liang; William Cookson; Anja Bauerfeind; Min-Ae Lee-Kirsch; Katja Nemat; John Henderson; Lavinia Paternoster; John I. Harper; Elisabeth Mangold; Markus M. Nöthen; Franz Rüschendorf; Tamara Kerscher; Ingo Marenholz; Anja Matanovic; Susanne Lau; Thomas Keil; Carl-Peter Bauer; Michael Kurek; Andrzej Ciechanowicz; Milan Macek; Andre Franke; Michael Kabesch; Norbert Hubner; Gonçalo R. Abecasis; Stephan Weidinger; Miriam Moffatt; Young-Ae Lee


/data/revues/00916749/unassign/S0091674913003229/ | 2013

A functional IL-6 receptor ( IL6R ) variant is a risk factor for persistent atopic dermatitis

Heidi Schaarschmidt; Liming Liang; William Cookson; Anja Bauerfeind; Min-Ae Lee-Kirsch; Katja Nemat; John Henderson; Lavinia Paternoster; John I. Harper; Elisabeth Mangold; Markus M. Nöthen; Franz Rüschendorf; Tamara Kerscher; Ingo Marenholz; Anja Matanovic; Susanne Lau; Thomas Keil; Carl-Peter Bauer; Michael Kurek; Andrzej Ciechanowicz; Milan Macek; Andre Franke; Michael Kabesch; Norbert Hubner; Gonçalo R. Abecasis; Stephan Weidinger; Miriam F. Moffatt; Young-Ae Lee

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Norbert Hubner

Max Delbrück Center for Molecular Medicine

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Anja Bauerfeind

Max Delbrück Center for Molecular Medicine

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Franz Rüschendorf

Max Delbrück Center for Molecular Medicine

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Katja Nemat

Dresden University of Technology

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